Long march along Yangtze aims to highlight pollution (China Daily) Updated: 2004-06-07 08:59 A team of Chinese experts
will kick off an environmental "long march" next month along the country's
longest river to raise the public's awareness of the acute pollution in the
river.
They will start from Chongqing, travel along the river and doing research and
educating people, and will arrive in Shanghai next March.
If enough attention is not given, the Yangtze River might become as heavily
polluted as the Yellow River, warned experts attending the press conference last
week in Shanghai.
The event, "Long March to Protect the Yangtze River," was organized by the
Standing Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
The Yangtze River Delta covers less than one fifth of the country's total
area, but it accommodates more than one third of its population. The river
zigzags through 10 provinces, cities and autonomous regions and links four
industrial cities: Chongqing, Wuhan, Nanjing and Shanghai.
"As an important economic zone, China depends on the Yangtze River if it
wants to be a developed country, for the river has rich water resources,
transportation capacity and also biological resources," said Chen Jiakuan from
Fudan University, who specializes in bio-ecology.
But what the river faces now is heavy damage inflicted by human activities.
Construction of large-scale hydro-power stations and dams have brought big
changes to the river. Lakes along the river are thinning as expanding farmland
has reduced the size of some lakes by half.
With a big population and fast developed industry, the delta discharges both
industrial and life sewage into the river without fully treating it.
According to an investigation launched by the China Development Research
Institute last year, the polluted water in the Yangtze River has affected the
operation of water pumping stations in more than 500 main cities.
Shanghai, located at the lower reaches of the river, is both a victim and a
destroyer. A decade ago, the city's designed ability to process the sewage was
only about 15 per cent of the discharge, which means about 85 per cent of sewage
was thrown into the river without proper treatment. In 2004, the processing
ability could reach 90 per cent.
"What surprised me more is not the serious situation but the weak awareness
of people living along the Yangtze River," said Zhang Qi, managing president of
the institute which co-organizes the trip.
"So the aim of this trip is to raise people' awareness to protect the river,"
he added.
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